SIGEF2018 by Horyou Shaping Better Times to Come

Jay OwenReforming Global Finance, SRI/ESG News

SIGEF2018  PROCEEDINGS

With  its  fifth  edition  of  SIGEF,  which  was  staged  for  the  first  time  in  Asia/Singapore,   Horyou  aimed  high  and  took  its  participants  right  where  technology  pledges  inclusion   and  sustainability.       From  its  opening  remarks  through  to  its  closing  speeches,  with  keynotes  and  panels   tackling  sensitive  yet  most  relevant  themes  and  topics  such  as  urban  sustainability,   Fintech  and  blockchain  with  a  purpose,  Sustainable  Development  Goals  (SDG),  Gender   equality,  MedTech  for  inclusive  care,  social  impact  with  financial  returns,  and  clean  and   synchronized  future  energy,  SIGEF2018  was  set  to  serve  as  the  model  forum  that   Millenials  have  been  requiring  for  years:  a  practical,  positive  and  feasible  solution   geared  gathering  of  investors,  civil  servants,  researchers,  experts,  civil  society  activists,   philanthropists,  NGOs  and  academics  sharing  experiences,  advice  and  proposals,  all   bound  to  lead  to  a  more  globally  beyond  frontier  sustainable  and  inclusive  future  for  all.     Fabrice  Filliez,  the  Swiss  Ambassador  to  Singapore,  did  the  opening  at  the  Suntec   Convention  Centre,  insisting  on  “Swiss  and  Singapore  commonalities  promoting  peace   and  security  through  dialogue”.  This  message,  clearly,  was  not  meant  to  stop  at  bilateral   relations  but  be  understood  as  the  condition  of  possibility  of  global  sustainability  and   inclusion.  Building  on  the  example  of  Horyou,  the  social  network  for  social  good,  Mr.   Filliez  reminded  the  two-­?hundred-­?and-­?fifty-­?participant  floor  of  the  role  of  Switzerland   in  promoting  peace  and  dialogue  through  hosting  the  headquarters  of  major  global   institutions  whose  role  and  actions  are  precisely  aimed  at  Shaping  Better  Times  to  Come,   which  was  the  theme  of  the  Forum.     Filliez  was  followed  by  Kazuhiro  Hisata,  serial  entrepreneur,  marketing  expert,  angel   investor  and  a  Blockchain  evangelist,  Founder  of  SRS  Fintech  Commerce  Ltd.  Which   sponsored  the  event,  reminded  the  audience  that  likeminded  differences  are  assets   when  sharing  the  same  goals.  Tackling  the  particular  issue  of  blockchain  and   cryptocurrencies  and  the  fears  that,  in  some  circles,  they  may  induce,  Mr.  Hisata  insisted   that  “Money  can  exist  without  form  or  shape;  it  is  a  good  service  and  is  more  usable  to   change  the  world“.  In  that  regard,  and  stemming  inspiration  from  HoryouToken,  he   affirmed  that  each  one  can  spread  the  ideals  of  Horyou.     Coming  next,  Yonathan  Parienti,  founder  and  CEO  of  Horyou,  the  organizer  of  the  Forum,   restated  the  objective  of  SIGEF2018  as  a  milestone  on  the  road  to  “leverage  technology   to  induce  inclusion  and  sustainability”.  Insisting  on  the  need  to  find  solutions  he  urged   the  participants  to  show  more  implication:  “Don’t  be  shy,  connect  and  share;  be  concrete   and  your  dream  –  our  dream  -­?  will  turn  to  reality.”     First  pitch  on  urban  sustainability,  Natalie  Doran,  Digital  Marketing  Director  of   Timetech,  a  blockchain-­?based  time  exchange  project,  put  forth  the  importance  of  global   timesharing  as  key  to  a  more  inclusive  world.  She  was  followed  by  Kavita  Sinha,  from   Silver  Spring  Networks  and  founder  of  an  NGO  that  caters  for  children  with  hearing   disabilities,  cited  the  example  of  her  own  son  who,  thanks  to  a  chip  implanted  in  his   brain,  “is  now  like  just  another  kid”,  to  underscore  the  importance  of  technology  for   inclusion.
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Also  on  that  panel,  Andy  Sim,  a  philanthropist  involved  in  digital  innovations  that  make   giving  “simple,  meaningful  and  fun  for  everyone”,  talked  about  his  pursuit  of  ways  to  “go   beyond  smart  to  avoid  being  less  human”,  and  advocated  the  need  to  “create  solutions   before  technology  and  to  always  seek  the  meaning  of  life  while  accruing  our  means  to   live.”  He  was  succeeded  by  Damian  Tan,  Managing  Director  of  Vickers  Venture  Partners   and  long  time  IT  specialist,  who  is  actively  involved  in  the  project  of  “everyone  being   able  to  choose  the  kind  of  city  they  would  like  to  live  in”.  Commenting  on  the  best  ways   to  mix  philanthropy  with  profit,  he  asserted  that  the  solution  is  to  “always  look  for   impact.”     Thuc  Vu,  co-­?founder  and  CEO  of  OhmniLabs’,  and  a  robotics,  Artificial  Intelligence  and   algorithms  expert,  advocated  getting  over  a  sense  of  fear  regarding  robots  and  AI,  for   which  end  he  designed  and  set  up  a  special  open  innovation  platform  that  calls  on   collaborations  to  make  robotics  more  accessible  and  human  friendly  and  turn  them  into   real  facilitators  of  inclusion.  He  was  followed  by  Jan  Ondrus,  Associate  Professor  at   ESSEC  Asia  Pacific  and  director  of  research  at  the  Center  for  digital  excellence  in   business,  who  underscored  the  digital  divide  but  only  to  propose  way  to  bridge  the  gap.   “We  are  not  equal  in  terms  of  access  to  technology”,  reason  why  his  current  interests   cover  digital  business  models  and  innovation,  digital  platforms  and  ecosystems  strategy,   mobile  payment  and  Fintech,  and  strategy  of  IT,  to  get  over  the  divide.       The  second  session,  dedicated  to  Fintech  and  blockchain,  allowed  for  a  second  keynote   contribution  from  Kazuhiro  Hisata  who  described  the  ways  Fintech  and  Blockchain   technology  are  changing  the  world  &  lifestyles.  “It  is  good  service”,  he  asserted,  insisting   on  “the  opportunity  that  it  offers  to  revolutionize  humanity”.  Also  keynote  speaker  for   that  session,  Yonathan  Parienti  insisted  on  the  difficulty  to  get  funding  for  all  workers   for  social  good  but  only  to  unveil  effective  ways  to  “make  social  good  doers  visible  and   sustainable,  and  help  them  expand.”  “Everyone  can  be  a  force  for  good,  everyone  can   share  inspiration  and  be  an  agent  of  change”  he  added,  before  introducing   HoryouToken,  a  cryptocurrency  based  on  a  Blockchain  with  a  purpose,  that  “is  not  about   speculation  but  about  a  cryptocurrency  with  real  value  for  society  that  supports   constructive  initiatives  aimed  at  promoting  sustainability  and  inclusion.”     On  the  panel,  Karen  New,  an  ICO  advisor  and  author  of  the  first  book  on  cryptocurrency,   explicated  ways  of  bridging  “the  gap  in  understanding  technology  of  cryptocurrency  in   the  general  population”,  a  major  obstacle  hindering  its  going  mainstream.  She  confirmed   that  “regulations  are  coming  into  space  that  will  stabilize  the  market  in  terms  of   investment  and  speculation”,  while  admitting  that  “there’s  always  a  risk  because  it  takes   time  -­?  easily  a  year  or  two.”  Going  in  the  same  direction  of  how  to  turn  cryptocurrency   into  mainstream  substitute  money,  Kenneth  Bok,  director  of  Singapore-­?based  Blocks,   insisted  that,  beyond  the  issue  of  speculation,  it  is  “important  to  talk  about  money  and   how  the  role  of  money  is  changing;  talk  about  who  issues  and  controls  money,  and  how   to  be  smart  with  fiat  money”.  Convinced  that  “decentralization  will  allow  local   communities  to  come  together”,  because  “Blockchain  is  not  just  about  money  but  about   information.”       Chan  Sik  Ahn,  a  legal  advisor  and  partner  at  HMP  Law,  explored  the  tricky  ground  of   legal  vs.  illegal  technology,  reminding  us  of  how  we  sometimes  promote  and  sometimes   prohibit  technology.  Reviewing  ways  of  reconciling  law  and  technology,  which  aims  at
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the  protection  of  the  general  public  “because  Blockchain  has  the  same  impact  as  the   Internet”,  he  insisted  on  the  importance  of  transparency  and  the  need  to  make  a   difference  among  the  many  players  that  are  coming  up.  “You  have  to  look  into  them  and   find  out  about  their  project”,  he  advised.     Moving  into  SIGEF’s  session  3  dedicated  to  the  UN  Sustainable  Development  Goals  and   how  to  help  a  quick  implementation  of  their  main  dispositions,  which  was   complemented  with  a  panel  on  gender  equality,  was  the  occasion  for  keynote  speaker   Myriam  Feiler,  co-­?founder  of  bizzi.co,  a  collaboration  platform  for  the  world’s  small   business  owners  whose  goal  is  to  “enable  collaborations  that  solve  the  world’s  greatest   challenges”.  To  that  end,  Miriam  was  looking  to  meet  with  individuals  and  organizations   that  are  addressing  the  SDGs,  as  well  as  those  that  are  committed  to  helping  small   businesses  overcome  their  challenges  to  growth.     On  the  SDG  panel  was  Mikkel  Larsen,  managing  director  at  DBS,  who  assigned  himself   the  mission  to  strengthen  his  bank’s  sustainability  agenda  in  various  ways.  In  July  2017,   for  instance,  DBS  was  the  first  financial  institution  in  Singapore  to  issue  a  green  bond  to   support  the  financing  of  green  assets.  “What  does  a  bank  to  do  with  sustainability?  Seek   impact  in  all  SDG  areas,  including  gender  equality.”  “Money  is  at  the  core  of  everything”,   he  reminded  candidly  and  “we  look  into  a  mix  of  social  and  environmental  issues  and  we   see  the  SDGs  as  investment  opportunities.”     Looking  into  the  perennial  issue  of  which  SDG  should  come  first,  Noriko  Mitsui,   entrepreneur  and  philanthropist,  and  Horyou’s  ambassador  in  Japan,  said  that  while  all   17  SDGs  are  important  and  “Horyou  supports  all  SDGs”,  “for  me  hunger  is  my  objective;   my  conviction  and  mission  is  that  everybody  has  the  right  to  live  happily.”  A  conviction   that  was  shared  by  Prasanna  Da  Silva,  World  Vision  International’s  (WVI)  Senior   Director  of  Operations/COO  for  APAC,  whose  motto  is  “work  together”.  Showcasing  his   unique  experience  in  and  excellent  understanding  of  poor  and  marginalized   communities,  he  underscored  the  importance  of  skills  in  community  mobilization,   capability  building,  and  interfaith  harmonization  to  successfully  implement  the  SDGs.  Da   Silva  also  strongly  promoted  “the  importance  of  partnerships  and  close  collaboration   with  local  government  agencies  and  other  community  development  actors.”     Da  Silva  was  succeeded  by  Simon  JD  Schillebeeckx,  Assistant  Professor  of  Strategy  &   Innovation  at  the  Lee  Kong  Chian  School  of  Business  of  Singapore  Management   University  (SMU),  who  urged  all  stakeholders  for  a  clear  prioritization  of  the  SDGs,   putting  environmental  issues  and  climate  change  at  the  very  top,  when  Arndt  Huar,   Deputy  Director  at  the  UN  Development  Program  (UNDP)  Global  Centre  for  Public   Service  Excellence  (GCPSE),  reminded  panelists  and  participants  alike  that  “SDG  is  a   complex  framework  and  complicated  to  measure  while  it  reflects  the  complexity  of   reality”.  Reflecting  on  the  role  of  governments,  he  offered  his  vision  whereby   “governments  are  facilitators  and  not  administrators  of  change.”     Keynote  speaker  on  gender  equality,  Josie  Ho,  multiple  award-­?winning  actress,  rock  star,   fashion  icon  and  producer  from  Hong  Kong,  drew  a  list  of  some  of  the  complications  and   hindrances  relating  to  gender  that  an  actress  is  bound  to  endure  on  any  set  but  that,   nevertheless,  her  positive  and  gamey  vision  of  a  life  revolving  around  fire,  ice  and  bliss,   makes  it  easier  on  her  to  overcome  and  work  to  change  through  dialogue.  On  that  panel,
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Hayden  Majajas,  head  of  diversity  and  inclusion  at  Bloomberg  APAC,  presented  his   strategy  to  deliver  a  measurable  improvement  in  diverse  workforce  representation  and   work  environment  inclusion  insisting  on  the  propensity  that  many  have  in  creating   barriers  and  how  to  bring  those  barriers  down  via  an  institutional  culture  of  inclusion.   He  was  succeeded  by  Pia  Bruce,  soft-­?spoken  and  nevertheless  very  active  former   Executive  Director  of  the  Singapore  Committee  for  UN  Women  (formerly  UNIFEM),   drew  a  compelling  picture  of  her  involvement  in  multiple  initiatives  that  provide  women   and  girls  with  access  to  education,  economic  independence  and  a  life  free  of  violence  and   abuse.  Some  of  her  contributions  include  supporting  women  led  social  enterprises  in  the   region  or  being  on  the  founding  team  of  Aidha,  a  micro-­?business  school  for  foreign   domestic  workers  in  Singapore,  preparing  migrant  women  to  start  small  successful   businesses  in  their  home  countries  to  support  their  families.     Also  on  that  panel,  Stephanie  Dickson  who  assigned  herself  a  “mission  to  make   sustainability  mainstream  and  sexy”  as  Director  Blocks  at  Green  is  the  new  black,  which   she  has  founded  and  is  “Asia’s  first  conscious  festival  and  media  platform  for  people  who   want  to  #LiveMoreConsciously  by  improving  the  way  they  think,  work  and  consume   while  doing  more  good  in  the  world”,  through  the  organization  of  international  events   and  experiences  where  fun  and  social  responsibility  go  hand  in  hand.     The  session  was  followed  by  a  musical  interlude  that  served  as  an  introduction  to  the   session  on  Medtech.  The  interlude  was  piloted  by  Emerson  Gale,  a  violinist  and   international  music  education  entrepreneur  who  specializes  in  soundscape  Eco  therapy.   While  doing  his  pitch,  Gale  introduced  his  strategy  of  building  intergenerational   communities  via  the  arts  and  outdoor  education  in  the  U.S.,  U.K.,  and  China.  He  has   produced  the  Youtube  channel  Crypto  Musical  to  offer  educational  information  about   blockchain  for  social  good  projects.       The  interlude  allowed  for  the  MedTech  session  to  get  off  to  a  flying  start  with  a  sixteen   year  old  panelist  who  created  an  application  to  provide  easy  education  for  children  with   problems.  Ondrej  Vrabel,  a  true  wonder  boy,  is  indeed  the  author  of  the  Innovative   Project  Pinf  Hry  (www.pinfhry.com),  which  was  featured  at  SIGEF  2015,  and  the   youngest  holder  of  the  Slovak  Crystal  Wing  Award  for  Philanthropy.  Project  Pinf  Hry   helps  children  with  special  needs  and  learning  difficulties  with  color  recognition,   reading,  writing,  logical  thinking  and  other  important  skills  which  healthy  people  take   for  granted.       Ondrej  was  succeeded  by  Dr.  Prem  Pillay,  now  senior  consultant  at  the  Singapore  Brain-­? Spine-­?Nerves  Center  at  Mt  Elizabeth  Medical  Center  and  Hospital  and  at  the  Advanced   Spine  Center  at  Mt  Elizabeth  Novena  Medical  Center  and  Hospital  in  Singapore.  An   award  winning  and  pioneering  Neurosurgeon  in  the  areas  of  less  invasive  Brain  and   Spine  treatments/surgery,  Dr.  Prem  Pillay  predicts  and  militates  for  a  programmed   obsolescence  of  hospitals  in  favor  of  proximity  technology  that  is  both  more  humane  and   more  efficient,  whereby  patients  would  be  diagnosed  and  medicated  at  home  thanks  to   adapted  robotics.     Also  on  the  panel,  Maria  Guzman,  a  psychologist,  writer  and  life  coach  is  also  a  survivor   who  went  through  a  process  of  rebirth  after  a  coma  due  to  chemotherapy  gone  wrong.   Her  teaching/coaching,  which  she  extensively  presented  at  the  conference,  focuses  on
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the  meaning  and  importance  of  life  and  source  of  life.,  to  close  the  gap  between   technology  and  humanity,  and  thus  paved  the  way  for  Dr.  Lindsay  Wu,  Chief  Scientific   Advisor  and  co-­?founder  of  Life  Biosciences,  whose  work  aims  to  control  the  ageing   process  to  significantly  extend  lifespan  while  maintaining  health  and  fertility  late  into   life.     Then  came  the  much-­?awaited  session  on  impact  investment  with  an  opening  keynote   speech  from  Steve  Leonard,  founder  and  CEO  of  Singapore-­?based  SGInnovate,  a  private   limited  company  wholly  owned  by  the  Singapore  Government  who  has  chartered  Mr.   Leonard  to  lead  a  program  that  builds  ‘deep-­?tech’  companies.  Capitalizing  on  the  science   and  technology  research  for  which,  he  reminded,  that  Singapore  has  gained  a  global   reputation,  his  team  has  worked  with  local  and  international  partners,  including   universities,  venture  capitalists,  and  major  corporations,  to  help  technical  founders   imagine,  start  and  scale  globally-­?relevant  early-­?stage  technology  companies  from   Singapore.  Most  notably,  he  has  focused  on  people  with  no  legal  identity  and   consequently  worked  on  providing  legal  identity  to  all  and  promoted  Blockchain  and   donation  to  attain  his  goals.  He  also  supported  the  revival  of  declining  industries  and   cited,  in  that  regard,  the  example  of  the  support  he  provided  to  750,000  people  in   Cambodia  involved  in  reviving  the  silk  painting  industry.     Leonard  was  succeeded  by  Decentro  Janukta,  founder  of  Decentro  Media  New  Zealand.   In  his  talk,  Decentro  communicated  to  the  floor  his  passion  about  the  Education  and   Poverty  aspects  of  the  UN  Sustainability  Goals  in  particular,  through  a  game  changing   truth  regarding  humanity  and  how  we  relate  with  Mathematics.  With  his  mind   challenging  title  of  “Teaching  Math  to  Goldfish”,  he  elaborated  on  his  discovery  and  its   importance  to  global  social  development  and  our  decentralized  future.     The  panel  that  followed  was  comprised  of  Leonard  and  Decentro  who  were  joined  by   Jenni  Risku,  a  social  impact  entrepreneur  and  founder  of  the  Women  in  Tech  Conference   in  Asia.  Jenni  has  been  promoting  cross-­?boarder  investments  between  China  and  Europe   until  she  launched  Women  in  Tech,  an  annual  technology  conference  that  is  organized  in   association  with  Singapore’s  technology  and  innovation  week  SWITCH.  Women  in  Tech,   she  explained,  showcases  female  role  models  in  tech  and  science,  and  provides  various   activities  for  career  development  in  the  industry.  Its  latest  event  at  the  MBS  Expo  in   September,  as  she  underscored,  gathered  over  1,500  people  from  25  countries,  had  over   60  partner  organizations  and  was  sponsored  by  top  industry  influencers  such  as   Accenture,  Google,  Facebook,  CA  Technologies,  Amazon  and  others,  and  has  attracted   top  policy  makers,  startups,  corporate  and  SME  leadership,  students  and  media.  Also  on   that  panel  were  Marc  Lansonneur,  Robert  Kraybill  and  Brian  Wilson.       Lansonneur,  Managing  Director,  Head  of  Managed  Solutions  and  Investment  Governance   at  DBS  Singapore  where  he  assigned  himself  the  mission  to  source  and  distribute   investment  products  and  build  an  offer  in  social  investment.  Insisting  on  the  need  to   avoid  confusion  between  philanthropy  and  impact  investing,  he  underscored  the  need  to   pick  projects  with  a  reasonable  promise  of  guaranteed  return  on  investment.  As  for   Robert  Kraybill,  Managing  Director,  Portfolio  Management  of  Impact  Investment   Exchange  (IIX),  has  been  instrumental  in  restructuring  the  Women’s  Livelihood  Bond,  a   first-­?of-­?its-­?kind  listed  impact  investment  bond  designed  to  bring  sustainable  livelihoods   to  over  385,000  women  in  Southeast  Asia.
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Last  but  not  least,  Brian  Wilson  who  defines  himself  as  a  Blockchain  and  cryptocurrency   evangelist,  has  been  focusing  on  Blockchain,  cryptocurrency  and  mining  to  solve  hunger.   Based  in  Japan,  he  advocated  transparency  and  cited  his  country  of  residence  as  an   example  of  openness.  In  line  with  his  philosophy,  Wilson  has  started  a  cryptocurrency   bar  where  he  teaches  cryptocurrency  mining  and  the  importance  of  this  technology  to   the  world.  A  firm  believer  in  Horyou’s  mission  statement,  he  has  opted  to  promote   HoryouToken  and  has  become  an  active  ambassador  of  Horyou  in  Japan.     The  final  session  on  Future  Energy  kicked  off  with  a  keynote  speech  and  two  pitches   that  paved  the  way  for  a  lively  panel  on  the  pivotal  question  of  production  standards  and   synchronized  distribution  during  the  transition  towards  the  provision  of  cleaner  energy.   In  his  keynote,  Leopold  Feiler,  a  German  serial  entrepreneur  in  the  fields  of  strategic   marketing,  media  and  communications,  and  Blockchain  enthusiast,  presented  a   revolutionary  yet  scalable  and  safe  energy  storage  system  that  he  designed  and  to  which   he  finds  potential  to  disrupt  the  future  energy  market.  The  pitch  of  Rowan  Logie,  an   advisor  to  Swytch,  a  blockchain  renewable  energy  verification  and  incentive  project   designed  to  create  a  trustless  global  market  for  smart  carbon  off-­?setting,  presented   various  ways  and  devices  based  on  solar  energy.  As  for  Vincent  Bakker,  co-­?founder  and   CFO  of  Positive  Energy,  he  exposed  ways  and  means  to  simplify  the  financing  of  smaller   renewable  energy  projects  that  are  meant  to  enable  a  sustainable  electrification  of  the   APAC  region.       The  panel  that  followed,  was  comprised  of  Feiler,  Logie  and  Bakker  who  were  joined  by   Assaad  Razzouk,  a  Lebanese-­?British  clean  energy  entrepreneur,  investor  and   commentator,  and  Ryan  Merrill,  adjunct  professor  in  sustainability,  strategy  and   innovation  at  Singapore  Management  University.  The  animated  discussions  tackled  the   sensitive  issue  of  realistic  approaches  to  a  smooth  transition  toward  a  wide  scale   production,  storage  and  distribution  of  clean  energy  in  the  wake  of  the  planned   obsolescence  –  and  death,  in  Mr.  Razzouk’s  words  “Fossil  fuels  are  dead,  finished”,  he   affirmed  -­?,  of  fossil  fuels.  Absolute  as  it  was,  though  put  into  perspective  by  the  other   panelists,  Mr.  Razzouk’s  statement  was  nevertheless  an  indication  that  the  future  of   clean  energy  seems  to  be  clearing  out.  That,  at  least,  was  the  “reason  to  believe  and  be   optimistic”  conclusion  of  the  panel.     Reason(s)  to  be  optimistic  was  also  the  closing  remark  of  SIGEF2018’s  MC,  Teymoor   Nabili,  as  well  as  its  chairman,  Yonathan  Parienti,  both  of  whom  reminded  the   participants  that  the  forum’s  primary  aim  was  to  nurture  inspiration  and  positive  action,   while  promoting  the  adoption  of  technology  and  innovation  for  sustainability  and   inclusion  as  the  right  way  to  start  shaping  better  times